A mandatory tender offer in Egypt is triggered when a bidder, alone or together with related parties, crosses the statutory ownership threshold for voting shares in a company listed on the Egyptian Exchange (EGX). The Financial Regulatory Authority (FRA) supervises every stage of the process, from the initial filing through to settlement and, where applicable, delisting. With the FRA’s June 2026 roll‑out of updated market‑mechanism rules reinforcing disclosure windows and tightening execution timelines, deal teams must revisit their playbooks for both offensive and defensive takeover strategies.
This guide walks bidders, target boards and minority shareholders through each step of the Egyptian takeover procedure, thresholds, filings, valuation, squeeze‑out mechanics and cross‑border execution risks, so that every participant can act with confidence and full regulatory compliance.
Key immediate actions for deal teams:
The legal architecture governing a mandatory tender offer in Egypt rests primarily on the Capital Markets Law (Law No. 95 of 1992), its Executive Regulations, and the suite of FRA Board of Directors’ decisions that have supplemented and refined the original statute. Chapter 12 of the Executive Regulations, as restated and amended through 2018 and subsequently updated, sets out the takeover rules Egypt market participants must follow, including the circumstances that trigger an MTO, the procedure for filings, and the protections afforded to minority shareholders.
The Financial Regulatory Authority (FRA) is the primary regulator. It reviews and approves (or rejects) every mandatory and voluntary tender offer, supervises pricing and disclosure, and has the authority to impose sanctions for non‑compliance. The Egyptian Exchange (EGX) plays a complementary role: it manages trading halts and resumptions around offer periods, enforces market‑disclosure obligations, and administers the mechanics of delisting when a squeeze‑out is completed.
A mandatory tender offer is required when a person, individually or acting in concert with related parties, acquires shares that cause their aggregate ownership or voting rights in an EGX‑listed company to exceed the statutory control threshold. Authoritative practitioner guides consistently identify this threshold as ownership exceeding a specified percentage of ordinary shares or voting rights, with supplementary triggers for creeping acquisitions within defined time windows.
| Source | Stated Trigger / Threshold | Practical Note for Deal Teams |
|---|---|---|
| Baker McKenzie (Global Public M&A Guide: Egypt) | Ownership exceeding a one‑third threshold of ordinary shares or voting rights triggers an MTO obligation, with further obligations at higher thresholds. | Use as an operational guide: when approaching majority control, model MTO timing and pricing into the offer structure before executing any purchase. |
| Al Tamimi & Company (Egypt acquisition articles) | MTO required when a person (and related parties) exceeds the statutory control thresholds; notes on conditionality and FRA approvals. | Law‑firm practical commentary, keep as a cross‑check for drafting notices and filing documents. |
| CMS Guide / Matouk Bassiouny / Lexology summaries | Varied references: creeping thresholds, requirements to offer to all remaining shareholders, and FRA discretion on exemptions. | Use a combined reading: regulatory interpretation can differ between sources, always verify current thresholds with the FRA and qualified Egyptian counsel. |
The FRA takeover regulations do not permit bidders to circumvent MTO obligations through fragmented purchasing. Several aggregation and anti‑avoidance principles apply:
The Egyptian takeover procedure is a sequential, regulator‑driven process. Missing a deadline or omitting a required document can result in the FRA rejecting the filing or imposing penalties. The following step‑by‑step timeline reflects current practice, incorporating the tightened execution windows introduced by the FRA’s 2026 operational update.
Before any public announcement, the bidder should complete commercial due diligence on the target, engage Egyptian legal and financial advisers, appoint an independent valuer (where required), and prepare a draft offer document. Early, confidential consultation with the FRA is strongly recommended to confirm the applicable threshold, identify any exemptions, and agree on the expected review timeline.
Once the control event occurs (or is anticipated), the bidder must file a complete offer package with the FRA. Authoritative guides indicate a filing window that requires the bidder to submit the application within a defined number of business days following the triggering event. The filing pack typically includes:
| Document | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Offer application form (FRA prescribed format) | Formal request for FRA approval to launch the MTO |
| Offer document / prospectus | Full terms: price, consideration, conditions, acceptance period |
| Independent valuation report | Supports the offer price; must meet FRA standards |
| Proof of financing / irrevocable bank guarantee | Demonstrates bidder’s ability to fund the full offer |
| Disclosure of bidder group and related parties | Allows FRA to verify threshold calculations |
| Board resolution of the bidder entity | Corporate authorisation for the offer |
The FRA reviews the filing for completeness and compliance. It may request additional information or amendments to the offer terms. Industry observers expect the review period to last several weeks, depending on the complexity of the transaction and the quality of the initial filing. Incomplete submissions are a common cause of delay.
Upon FRA approval, the bidder publishes the offer in designated newspapers and through the EGX’s electronic disclosure system. The offer must remain open for the minimum acceptance period prescribed by the regulations, giving all eligible shareholders adequate time to evaluate the terms and tender their shares.
Shareholders who wish to accept the offer submit their acceptance through their custodian or broker during the acceptance period. At the close of the offer, the bidder settles with accepting shareholders, typically within a short, defined execution window (practitioner sources reference settlement within five working days of the offer’s close). The EGX coordinates the settlement mechanics through its clearing and settlement infrastructure.
After settlement, the bidder must file a post‑offer report with the FRA disclosing the final acceptance level, the resulting shareholding and any plans regarding delisting. If the bidder has reached the squeeze‑out threshold, it may proceed with compulsory acquisition of the remaining shares and apply to the EGX for delisting, a process addressed in detail below.
How a mandatory tender offer in Egypt is priced determines whether minority shareholders will accept and whether the FRA will approve the terms. The regulatory framework imposes minimum‑price requirements designed to ensure fairness.
The offer price must be supported by an independent valuation report prepared by an FRA‑approved valuer. Common valuation methodologies include discounted cash flow (DCF), comparable‑company multiples and, where relevant, net asset value. The FRA expects the offer price to be at least equal to the highest price paid by the bidder (or related parties) for shares in the target during a specified look‑back period preceding the offer. This fair‑price rule prevents bidders from accumulating shares cheaply and then launching an MTO at a depressed price.
Under the FRA takeover regulations, an MTO may be made subject to certain conditions, for example, a minimum acceptance level, but only with prior FRA approval. The FRA retains discretion to reject conditions it considers unduly restrictive or prejudicial to minority shareholder protections. Bidders should draft conditions narrowly and justify each one in the filing.
Cash consideration is typically the norm. The bidder must demonstrate irrevocable funding, usually through a bank guarantee or an escrow deposit, before the offer is published. For cross‑border acquisition Egypt transactions, currency convertibility and repatriation mechanics require advance planning with the Central Bank of Egypt and the bidder’s custodian bank to avoid settlement delays.
Egypt’s takeover regime places significant emphasis on protecting minority shareholders throughout the MTO process. These protections operate at multiple levels, regulatory supervision, information rights, pricing safeguards and post‑offer remedies.
The squeeze‑out rules in Egypt allow a bidder that has reached the compulsory‑acquisition threshold following a successful MTO to acquire the remaining shares from non‑tendering shareholders at the offer price. The EGX then processes the delisting of the target’s shares. Key points for deal teams and minority shareholders include:
Non‑Egyptian bidders face additional layers of complexity when launching a takeover bid in Egypt. Careful advance planning can prevent costly delays or regulatory objections.
Every mandatory tender offer in Egypt carries a set of identifiable risks. Mapping these risks early allows both bidders and target boards to negotiate terms that allocate exposure fairly and reduce the likelihood of regulatory intervention or litigation.
| Risk Category | Description | Mitigation Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Regulatory risk | FRA rejects the offer, imposes conditions or delays approval beyond commercial timelines | Pre‑filing consultation; complete and accurate filings; experienced Egyptian counsel |
| Shareholder litigation | Minority shareholders challenge the offer price, process or squeeze‑out in court | Robust independent valuation; full disclosure; strict procedural compliance |
| Financing risk | Bidder’s funding becomes unavailable or conditions change between filing and settlement | Irrevocable bank guarantee; escrow deposits; hedging for FX exposure |
| Reputational risk | Negative market or media reaction to offer terms, bidder intentions or target board response | Proactive stakeholder communication; transparent disclosure of post‑acquisition plans |
The mandatory tender offer in Egypt framework is a tightly regulated, deadline‑driven process. The FRA’s 2026 operational update has reinforced the importance of precision in filings, valuation support and timeline management. The following action lists summarise the critical steps for each party.
For bidders:
For issuers and target boards:
Navigating these requirements demands hands‑on experience with FRA procedures and the Egyptian capital markets. Whether you are planning an acquisition, responding to an unsolicited bid or advising minority shareholders, specialist legal guidance is essential. Contact a capital‑markets lawyer through our lawyer directory for tailored advice on your specific transaction.
This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Readers should obtain advice from qualified Egyptian legal counsel before acting on any of the matters discussed above. Regulatory requirements may change; always verify current rules with the FRA and EGX.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Omneya Anas at Shalakany, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 11 minutes ago
posted 54 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 6 hours ago
posted 6 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message